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The American Wing

About Us

Visitors to the American Wing will experience in more than 75 galleries on three floors varied art, design, and culture from the mid-seventeenth to the mid-twentieth century, with some contemporary expressions, by a diverse array of artists from across North America. Since our founding in 1924, this curatorial department has evolved its collecting to include some 20,000 artworks in many mediums by African American, Asian American, Euro-American, Latin American, and Native American makers, affirming ever more inclusive definitions of American art and identity. These dynamic holdings include painting, sculpture, drawing, furniture, textiles, regalia, ceramics, basketry, glass, silver, metalwork, jewelry, as well as historic interiors and architectural fragments, produced by highly trained and self-taught artists, both identified and unrecorded. Monumental sculpture, stained glass, and architectural elements are installed in the Charles Engelhard Court; silver, gold, glass, and ceramics on the courtyard balconies. Narratives of American domestic architecture and furnishings are explored in twenty historical interiors, or period rooms. Changing rotations of painting, sculpture, works on paper, and textiles appear throughout the Wing.

Since its establishment in 1870, The Met has acquired significant examples of American art. A separate American Wing to display Euro-American domestic arts of the seventeenth to early nineteenth centuries opened in 1924; painting and sculpture galleries and a skylit courtyard were added in 1980. A major renovation and reinstallation of the Wing’s space and collection occurred between 2002 and 2012, and, in 2024, the department marked its 100th anniversary with a new reinstallation highlighting its history and ongoing evolution.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art is situated in Lenapehoking, homeland of the Lenape diaspora, and historically a gathering and trading place for many diverse Native Peoples, who continue to live and work on this island. We respectfully acknowledge and honor all Indigenous communities—past, present, and future—for their ongoing and fundamental relationships to the region.


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The Broncho Buster, Frederic Remington  American, Bronze, American
Frederic Remington
Roman Bronze Works
1895, revised 1909, cast by November 1910
Alexander Hamilton, John Trumbull  American, Oil on canvas, American
John Trumbull
1792
Ewer and Plateau, Gorham Manufacturing Company  American, Silver, American
Gorham Manufacturing Company
Spaulding and Company
1901
The Adams Vase, Paulding Farnham  American, Gold, amethysts, spessartites, tourmalines, fresh water pearls, quartzes, rock crystal, and enamel, American
Paulding Farnham
Tiffany & Co.
1893–95
High chest of drawers, Japanned maple, japanned white pine, white pine, japanned birch; brass, American
American
1740–60
Covered jar, Marie Zimmermann  American, Silver, gold,  jade, crystal, and rubies, American
Marie Zimmermann
1905–15
Spring Blossoms, Montclair, New Jersey, George Inness  American, Oil and crayon or charcoal on canvas, American
George Inness
ca. 1891
The Pleiades, Elihu Vedder  American, Oil on canvas, American
Elihu Vedder
1885
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